| Broadcasting
House on Ormeau Avenue is the home of the BBC in Northern
Ireland. Designed in 1936 by James Millar of Glasgow,
the imposing and austere neo-Georgian style is typical
of the era. The frame is steel with reinforced concrete
floors and roof and it has a facing of sand-faced bricks
on an artificial stone base.
The BBC began its operations in 1924 from a disused
linen warehouse round the corner in Linen Hall Street
but in 1938 work began on the new building. Construction
continued despite the outbreak of the Second World War
and in May 1941 Broadcasting House was officially opened.
It contained a spacious concert hall, and several studios
– all of which were used for radio broadcasts. There
was no television output in those days.
The building stands six storeys high and its curved
grey façade turns the corner between Ormeau Avenue and
Bedford Street. An eight-storey extension along Ormeau
Avenue was built in 1975 and a further three-storey
extension, largely catering for an expanding news and
current affairs service, was added in Linen Hall Street
West in 1984.
Television began in Northern Ireland in 1953 – timed
so that viewers could witness the Coronation of Queen
Elizabeth II – and the BBC’s first local television
news bulletins were broadcast in 1957. BBC Radio Ulster,
a service for the entire region, made its debut in 1975
and BBC Radio Foyle, broadcasting to listeners in the
North-West, began in 1979.
Broadcasting House is the hub of an ever-widening range
of radio and television programmes and online services.
Its work reflects the diversity, creative skills and
experiences of local people and makes increasing use
of digital technologies to connect with audiences at
home and around the world. BBC programmes and services
are provided 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
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